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Thunder clinch playoff spot by passing Celtics test


BOSTON — The Oklahoma City Thunder clinched a playoff berth Wednesday night.

But simply returning to the playoffs, after last season’s heartbreaking loss to the Dallas Mavericks in six games in the Western Conference semifinals, is far from the goal. Instead, the Thunder have their eyes on a bigger prize: the franchise’s first NBA championship.

So, rather than clinching that playoff berth, what mattered to Thunder guard and NBA MVP front-runner Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was that they did it by beating the defending champion Boston Celtics at TD Garden.

Doing so completed a sweep of the two-game season series against Boston and sent the loudest message yet about the intentions of Gilgeous-Alexander and the rest of the Thunder for the months ahead.

“It’s huge,” Gilgeous-Alexander said of the 118-112 win, after putting up 34 points, 5 rebounds and 7 assists in 39 minutes. “Because [the Celtics have] done it, because they’ve done what we’re trying to do, the games against them are always going to be heightened. They’re always going to be a little bit more exciting. They, like I said, achieved what we are trying to accomplish, and there’s no better test in the NBA.

“You play for late June, and the other team had won late June. So playing against them is always fun, always a really big challenge and something that we get to test ourselves against them. I guess we passed two tests so far.”

Not only did the Thunder pass those tests with flying colors, but they won both games against the Celtics with key players sitting out. In January, it was forward Chet Holmgren who was watching in street clothes because of a hip injury. Holmgren was back starring for Oklahoma City on Wednesday night with 23 points and 15 rebounds, while All-Star Jalen Williams was back home nursing a hip strain he suffered in Monday’s loss to Denver.

But Oklahoma City overcame both his and Alex Caruso‘s (illness) absences with a similar showing to the first meeting between these teams two months ago. In that contest, Boston struggled in the second half, going 8-for-40 from the field and 3-for-24 on 3-pointers.

In this game, the Celtics, who played without Kristaps Porzingis (illness), were red hot from 2-point range — they shot 15-for-19 inside the arc in the second half, including a perfect 13-for-13 on shots in the paint — but were just 20-for-63 overall from 3-point range.

Those 63 attempted 3s tied the third most in a game by any team in NBA history.

“I thought we got amazing looks,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said. “I mean, that’s just the shell of their defense. They protect the paint first. They fight, they try to get out, their 2-on-1 reads were really good. So I thought we generated relatively great looks throughout most of the game.”

The numbers bear that out. According to Second Spectrum’s tracking data, Boston attempted 47 catch-and-shoot 3-pointers, the Celtics’ second most in a game in franchise history.

In the first half, Boston went 11-for-27 on those shots. In the second? The Celtics were just 4-for-20, finishing 21% below their expected field goal percentage on those shots.

On Monday against the Nuggets, Oklahoma City shot 20% over its expected field goal percentage on 3-point attempts, per ESPN Research, which is why Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said his message to his team while it got off to a hot start from 3 was to stick to the game plan.

“Our ability to just kind of stick with it and not overreact, not start to get jumpy … that’s when you really get in trouble against them,” Daigneault said. “So I just thought our maturity, our discipline to the game plan through the ups and downs of a tough 48-minute game was a really positive thing for us tonight.”

So was the play of Holmgren. With Williams out, there was a spotlight on how the Thunder would manage the minutes Gilgeous-Alexander spends on the bench. They did so by turning to their two-big lineup of Isaiah Hartenstein and Holmgren, and Oklahoma City won the nine minutes Gilgeous-Alexander sat out by three points, in large part due to Holmgren’s impressive showing, his highest-scoring game since returning from his hip injury last month.

“Chet was really good tonight,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “He was impressive. We’re going to see him get more and more comfortable as the games go on, but he was special.

“He just played his game, and he let the game come to him, and that’s who Chet Holmgren is. That’s who he was before the injury.”

Boston’s Jayson Tatum had an excellent game, going for 33 points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists, but its second star, Jaylen Brown, never got going. Brown finished 5-for-15, including 0-for-5 from 3, before fouling out with more than three minutes remaining with 10 points.

“You play for late June, and the other team had won late June. So playing against them is always fun, always a really big challenge and something that we get to test ourselves against them.”

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

He credited Oklahoma City’s defense with taking him out of his rhythm.

“Tougher team sets the rules,” Brown said. “They had a good level of physicality tonight, and I could be more physical. I could use my body more, I settled in some spots, but I didn’t meet the level of physicality tonight. I had no free throw attempts, and that’s unusual.”

Boston players walked out of their arena Wednesday night knowing that if they face Oklahoma City again in a few months in the NBA Finals, they’ll do so having been hurt by poor shooting in the second half of both losses.

But Gilgeous-Alexander, when asked repeatedly about whether the Thunder were playing at a championship level right now, said they have a long way to go to achieve its goals this season. And Tatum, for his part, isn’t concerned about where Boston sits, either.

“Everybody has to play a little bit better,” he said. “Better at the margins, the little things. You’re playing against contending teams that are not really going to beat themselves. And the little things, make sure you get the 3-for-2, not fouling jump shooters at the end of the clock, live ball turnovers, things like that, you just got to be a little bit better on.

“We all do. And we will.”



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